Why do we sleep? | Russell Foster

2,845,009 views ・ 2013-08-14

TED


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00:12
What I'd like to do today is talk about one of my favorite subjects,
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and that is the neuroscience of sleep.
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Now, there is a sound --
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(Alarm clock)
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Ah, it worked!
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A sound that is desperately familiar to most of us,
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and of course it's the sound of the alarm clock.
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And what that truly ghastly, awful sound does
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is stop the single most important behavioral experience
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that we have, and that's sleep.
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If you're an average sort of person,
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36 percent of your life will be spent asleep,
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which means that if you live to 90,
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then 32 years will have been spent entirely asleep.
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01:01
Now what that 32 years is telling us is that sleep at some level is important.
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And yet, for most of us, we don't give sleep a second thought.
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We throw it away.
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We really just don't think about sleep.
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And so what I'd like to do today is change your views,
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change your ideas and your thoughts about sleep.
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And the journey that I want to take you on,
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we need to start by going back in time.
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"Enjoy the honey-heavy dew of slumber."
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Any ideas who said that?
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Shakespeare's Julius Caesar.
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Yes, let me give you a few more quotes.
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"O sleep, O gentle sleep, nature's soft nurse,
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how have I frighted thee?"
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Shakespeare again, from -- I won't say it --
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the Scottish play.
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(Laughter)
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From the same time:
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"Sleep is the golden chain that ties health and our bodies together."
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Extremely prophetic, by Thomas Dekker, another Elizabethan dramatist.
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But if we jump forward 400 years,
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the tone about sleep changes somewhat.
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This is from Thomas Edison, from the beginning of the 20th century:
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"Sleep is a criminal waste of time and a heritage from our cave days."
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Bang!
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(Laughter)
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And if we also jump into the 1980s, some of you may remember
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that Margaret Thatcher was reported to have said,
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"Sleep is for wimps."
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And of course the infamous -- what was his name? --
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the infamous Gordon Gekko from "Wall Street" said,
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"Money never sleeps."
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What do we do in the 20th century about sleep?
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Well, of course, we use Thomas Edison's light bulb
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to invade the night, and we occupied the dark,
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and in the process of this occupation,
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we've treated sleep as an illness, almost.
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We've treated it as an enemy.
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At most now, I suppose, we tolerate the need for sleep,
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and at worst perhaps many of us think of sleep
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as an illness that needs some sort of a cure.
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And our ignorance about sleep is really quite profound.
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Why is it? Why do we abandon sleep in our thoughts?
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Well, it's because you don't do anything much while you're asleep, it seems.
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You don't eat. You don't drink.
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And you don't have sex.
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Well, most of us anyway.
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And so, therefore it's --
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Sorry.
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It's a complete waste of time, right?
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Wrong.
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Actually, sleep is an incredibly important part of our biology,
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and neuroscientists are beginning to explain
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why it's so very important.
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So let's move to the brain.
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Now, here we have a brain.
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This is donated by a social scientist,
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and they said they didn't know what it was or indeed, how to use it, so --
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(Laughter)
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Sorry.
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So I borrowed it.
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I don't think they noticed. OK.
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(Laughter)
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The point I'm trying to make is that when you're asleep,
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this thing doesn't shut down.
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In fact, some areas of the brain are actually more active
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during the sleep state than during the wake state.
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The other thing that's really important about sleep
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is that it doesn't arise from a single structure within the brain,
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but is to some extent a network property.
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If we flip the brain on its back --
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I love this little bit of spinal cord here --
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this bit here is the hypothalamus,
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and right under there is a whole raft of interesting structures,
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not least the biological clock.
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The biological clock tells us when it's good to be up,
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when it's good to be asleep,
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and what that structure does is interact
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with a whole raft of other areas within the hypothalamus,
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the lateral hypothalamus, the ventrolateral preoptic nuclei.
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All of those combine,
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and they send projections down to the brain stem here.
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The brain stem then projects forward
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and bathes the cortex, this wonderfully wrinkly bit over here,
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with neurotransmitters that keep us awake
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and essentially provide us with our consciousness.
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So sleep arises from a whole raft
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of different interactions within the brain,
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and essentially, sleep is turned on and off
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as a result of a range of interactions in here.
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OK. So where have we got to?
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We've said that sleep is complicated
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and it takes 32 years of our life.
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But what I haven't explained is what sleep is about.
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So why do we sleep?
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And it won't surprise any of you that, of course,
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as scientists, we don't have a consensus.
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There are dozens of different ideas about why we sleep,
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and I'm going to outline three of those.
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The first is sort of the restoration idea,
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and it's somewhat intuitive.
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Essentially, all the stuff we've burned up during the day,
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we restore, we replace, we rebuild during the night.
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And indeed, as an explanation, it goes back to Aristotle,
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so that's what -- 2,300 years ago.
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It's gone in and out of fashion.
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It's fashionable at the moment
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because what's been shown is that within the brain,
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a whole raft of genes have been shown to be turned on only during sleep,
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and those genes are associated with restoration and metabolic pathways.
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So there's good evidence for the whole restoration hypothesis.
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What about energy conservation?
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Again, perhaps intuitive.
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You essentially sleep to save calories.
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Now, when you do the sums, though, it doesn't really pan out.
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If you compare an individual who has slept at night,
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or stayed awake and hasn't moved very much,
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the energy saving of sleeping is about 110 calories a night.
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Now, that's the equivalent of a hot dog bun.
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Now, I would say that a hot dog bun
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is kind of a meager return
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for such a complicated and demanding behavior as sleep.
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So I'm less convinced by the energy conservation idea.
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But the third idea I'm quite attracted to,
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which is brain processing and memory consolidation.
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What we know is that, if after you've tried to learn a task,
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and you sleep-deprive individuals,
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the ability to learn that task is smashed.
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It's really hugely attenuated.
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So sleep and memory consolidation is also very important.
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However, it's not just the laying down of memory
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and recalling it.
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What's turned out to be really exciting
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is that our ability to come up with novel solutions to complex problems
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is hugely enhanced by a night of sleep.
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In fact, it's been estimated to give us a threefold advantage.
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Sleeping at night enhances our creativity.
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And what seems to be going on is that, in the brain,
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those neural connections that are important,
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those synaptic connections that are important,
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are linked and strengthened,
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while those that are less important tend to fade away and be less important.
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OK.
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So we've had three explanations for why we might sleep,
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and I think the important thing to realize is that the details will vary,
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and it's probable we sleep for multiple different reasons.
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But sleep is not an indulgence.
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It's not some sort of thing that we can take on board rather casually.
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I think that sleep was once likened to an upgrade
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from economy to business class, you know, the equivalent of.
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It's not even an upgrade from economy to first class.
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The critical thing to realize is that if you don't sleep,
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you don't fly.
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Essentially, you never get there.
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And what's extraordinary about much of our society these days
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is that we are desperately sleep-deprived.
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So let's now look at sleep deprivation.
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Huge sectors of society are sleep-deprived,
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and let's look at our sleep-o-meter.
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So in the 1950s, good data suggests that most of us
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were getting around eight hours of sleep a night.
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Nowadays, we sleep one and a half to two hours less every night,
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so we're in the six-and-a-half-hours every-night league.
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For teenagers, it's worse, much worse.
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They need nine hours for full brain performance,
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and many of them, on a school night, are only getting five hours of sleep.
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It's simply not enough.
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If we think about other sectors of society -- the aged;
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if you are aged, then your ability to sleep in a single block
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is somewhat disrupted, and many sleep, again,
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less than five hours a night.
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Shift work.
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Shift work is extraordinary,
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perhaps 20 percent of the working population,
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and the body clock does not shift to the demands of working at night.
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It's locked onto the same light-dark cycle as the rest of us.
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So when the poor old shift worker is going home
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to try and sleep during the day, desperately tired,
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the body clock is saying, "Wake up. This is the time to be awake."
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So the quality of sleep that you get as a night shift worker
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is usually very poor, again in that sort of five-hour region.
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And then, of course, tens of millions of people suffer from jet lag.
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So who here has jet lag?
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Well, my goodness gracious.
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Well, thank you very much indeed for not falling asleep,
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because that's what your brain is craving.
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One of the things that the brain does is indulge in micro-sleeps,
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this involuntary falling asleep,
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and you have essentially no control over it.
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Now, micro-sleeps can be sort of somewhat embarrassing,
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but they can also be deadly.
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It's been estimated that 31 percent of drivers
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will fall asleep at the wheel at least once in their life,
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and in the US, the statistics are pretty good:
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100,000 accidents on the freeway have been associated with tiredness,
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loss of vigilance, and falling asleep -- a hundred thousand a year.
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It's extraordinary.
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At another level of terror,
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we dip into the tragic accidents at Chernobyl
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and indeed the space shuttle Challenger,
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which was so tragically lost.
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And in the investigations that followed those disasters,
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poor judgment as a result of extended shift work
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and loss of vigilance and tiredness
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was attributed to a big chunk of those disasters.
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When you're tired and you lack sleep,
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you have poor memory, you have poor creativity,
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you have increased impulsiveness,
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and you have overall poor judgment.
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But my friends, it's so much worse than that.
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(Laughter)
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If you are a tired brain,
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the brain is craving things to wake it up.
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So drugs, stimulants.
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Caffeine represents the stimulant of choice
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across much of the Western world.
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Much of the day is fueled by caffeine,
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and if you're a really naughty tired brain, nicotine.
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Of course, you're fueling the waking state with these stimulants,
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and then, of course, it gets to 11 o'clock at night,
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and the brain says to itself,
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"Actually, I need to be asleep fairly shortly.
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What do we do about that when I'm feeling completely wired?"
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Well, of course, you then resort to alcohol.
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Now alcohol, short-term, you know, once or twice,
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to use to mildly sedate you, can be very useful.
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It can actually ease the sleep transition.
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But what you must be so aware of is that alcohol doesn't provide sleep.
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A biological mimic for sleep,
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it sedates you.
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So it actually harms some of the neural processing
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that's going on during memory consolidation and memory recall.
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So it's a short-term acute measure,
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but for goodness sake,
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don't become addicted to alcohol
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as a way of getting to sleep every night.
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Another connection between loss of sleep is weight gain.
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If you sleep around about five hours or less every night,
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then you have a 50 percent likelihood of being obese.
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What's the connection here?
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Well, sleep loss seems to give rise to the release of the hormone ghrelin,
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the hunger hormone.
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Ghrelin is released.
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It gets to the brain.
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The brain says, "I need carbohydrates,"
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and what it does is seek out carbohydrates and particularly sugars.
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So there's a link between tiredness
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and the metabolic predisposition for weight gain: stress.
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Tired people are massively stressed.
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And one of the things of stress, of course, is loss of memory,
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which is what I sort of just then had a little lapse of.
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But stress is so much more.
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So, if you're acutely stressed, not a great problem,
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but it's sustained stress associated with sleep loss that's the problem.
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Sustained stress leads to suppressed immunity.
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And so, tired people tend to have higher rates of overall infection,
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and there's some very good studies
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showing that shift workers, for example, have higher rates of cancer.
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Increased levels of stress throw glucose into the circulation.
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Glucose becomes a dominant part of the vasculature
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and essentially you become glucose intolerant.
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Therefore, diabetes 2.
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Stress increases cardiovascular disease as a result of raising blood pressure.
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So there's a whole raft of things associated with sleep loss
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that are more than just a mildly impaired brain,
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which is where I think most people think that sleep loss resides.
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So at this point in the talk, this is a nice time to think,
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"Well, do you think on the whole I'm getting enough sleep?"
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So a quick show of hands.
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Who feels that they're getting enough sleep here?
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Oh. Well, that's pretty impressive.
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Good. We'll talk more about that later, about what are your tips.
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So most of us, of course, ask the question,
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"How do I know whether I'm getting enough sleep?"
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Well, it's not rocket science.
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If you need an alarm clock to get you out of bed in the morning,
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if you are taking a long time to get up,
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if you need lots of stimulants,
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if you're grumpy, if you're irritable,
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if you're told by your work colleagues that you're looking tired and irritable,
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chances are you are sleep-deprived.
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Listen to them. Listen to yourself.
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What do you do?
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Well -- and this is slightly offensive --
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sleep for dummies.
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(Laughter)
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Make your bedroom a haven for sleep.
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The first critical thing is make it as dark as you possibly can,
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and also make it slightly cool.
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Very important.
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Actually, reduce your amount of light exposure
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at least half an hour before you go to bed.
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Light increases levels of alertness and will delay sleep.
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What's the last thing that most of us do before we go to bed?
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We stand in a massively lit bathroom,
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looking into the mirror cleaning our teeth.
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It's the worst thing we can possibly do before we go to sleep.
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Turn off those mobile phones. Turn off those computers.
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Turn off all of those things that are also going to excite the brain.
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Try not to drink caffeine too late in the day,
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ideally not after lunch.
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Now, we've set about reducing light exposure before you go to bed,
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but light exposure in the morning
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is very good at setting the biological clock to the light-dark cycle.
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So seek out morning light.
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Basically, listen to yourself.
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Wind down.
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Do those sorts of things
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that you know are going to ease you off
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into the honey-heavy dew of slumber.
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OK.
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That's some facts. What about some myths?
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Teenagers are lazy.
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No. Poor things.
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They have a biological predisposition to go to bed late and get up late,
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so give them a break.
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We need eight hours of sleep a night.
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That's an average.
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Some people need more. Some people need less.
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And what you need to do is listen to your body.
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Do you need that much or do you need more?
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Simple as that.
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Old people need less sleep.
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Not true.
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The sleep demands of the aged do not go down.
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Essentially, sleep fragments and becomes less robust,
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16:20
but sleep requirements do not go down.
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16:23
And the fourth myth is early to bed, early to rise
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makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise.
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Well, that's wrong at so many different levels.
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16:33
(Laughter)
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There is no evidence that getting up early and going to bed early
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gives you more wealth at all.
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There's no difference in socioeconomic status.
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In my experience,
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the only difference between morning people and evening people
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is that those people that get up in the morning early
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are just horribly smug.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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OK.
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So for the last few minutes,
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what I want to do is change gears
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and talk about some really new, breaking areas of neuroscience,
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17:04
which is the association between mental health,
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mental illness and sleep disruption.
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17:10
We've known for 130 years that in severe mental illness,
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there is always, always sleep disruption,
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17:17
but it's been largely ignored.
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In the 1970s, when people started to think about this again,
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they said, "Yes, well, of course you have sleep disruption in schizophrenia,
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because they're on antipsychotics.
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It's the antipsychotics causing the sleep problems,"
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ignoring the fact that for a hundred years previously,
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sleep disruption had been reported before antipsychotics.
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17:37
So what's going on?
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Several groups are studying
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conditions like depression, schizophrenia and bipolar
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and what's going on in terms of sleep disruption.
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We have a big study which we published last year on schizophrenia,
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and the data were quite extraordinary.
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17:55
In those individuals with schizophrenia,
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much of the time, they were awake during the night phase
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and then they were asleep during the day.
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Other groups showed no 24-hour patterns whatsoever --
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their sleep was absolutely smashed.
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And some had no ability to regulate their sleep by the light-dark cycle.
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They were getting up later and later and later and later each night.
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It was smashed.
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So what's going on?
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18:20
And the really exciting news
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is that mental illness and sleep are not simply associated,
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but they are physically linked within the brain.
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The neural networks that predispose you to normal sleep,
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give you normal sleep,
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and those that give you normal mental health, are overlapping.
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And what's the evidence for that?
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Well, genes that have been shown
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to be very important in the generation of normal sleep,
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when mutated, when changed,
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also predispose individuals to mental health problems.
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18:51
And last year, we published a study
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which showed that a gene that's been linked to schizophrenia,
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18:56
when mutated, also smashes the sleep.
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18:59
So we have evidence of a genuine mechanistic overlap
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between these two important systems.
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19:05
Other work flowed from these studies.
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19:07
The first was that sleep disruption
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19:11
actually precedes certain types of mental illness,
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19:14
and we've shown that in those young individuals
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19:17
who are at high risk of developing bipolar disorder,
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19:20
they already have a sleep abnormality
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19:23
prior to any clinical diagnosis of bipolar.
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19:27
The other bit of data was that sleep disruption
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19:33
may actually exacerbate, make worse, the mental illness state.
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19:37
My colleague Dan Freeman has used a range of agents
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19:40
which have stabilized sleep and reduced levels of paranoia
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19:43
in those individuals by 50 percent.
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19:46
So what have we got?
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We've got, in these connections, some really exciting things.
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19:53
In terms of the neuroscience,
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19:55
by understanding these two systems,
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19:56
we're really beginning to understand how both sleep and mental illness
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20:00
are generated and regulated within the brain.
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20:03
The second area is that if we can use sleep
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20:06
and sleep disruption as an early warning signal,
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20:09
then we have the chance of going in.
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20:11
If we know these individuals are vulnerable,
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20:14
early intervention then becomes possible.
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20:16
And the third, which I think is the most exciting,
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is that we can think of the sleep centers within the brain
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20:21
as a new therapeutic target.
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20:23
Stabilize sleep in those individuals who are vulnerable,
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20:26
we can certainly make them healthier,
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20:28
but also alleviate some of the appalling symptoms of mental illness.
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20:33
So let me just finish.
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What I started by saying is: Take sleep seriously.
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20:37
Our attitudes toward sleep are so very different
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20:40
from a pre-industrial age,
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20:41
when we were almost wrapped in a duvet.
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20:43
We used to understand intuitively the importance of sleep.
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20:47
And this isn't some sort of crystal-waving nonsense.
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20:50
This is a pragmatic response to good health.
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20:53
If you have good sleep, it increases your concentration,
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20:56
attention, decision-making, creativity, social skills, health.
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21:00
If you get sleep, it reduces your mood changes, your stress,
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21:04
your levels of anger, your impulsivity,
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21:06
and your tendency to drink and take drugs.
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21:09
And we finished by saying
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21:12
that an understanding of the neuroscience of sleep
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21:15
is really informing the way we think
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21:18
about some of the causes of mental illness,
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21:20
and indeed is providing us new ways
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21:22
to treat these incredibly debilitating conditions.
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21:27
Jim Butcher, the fantasy writer, said,
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"Sleep is God. Go worship."
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21:33
And I can only recommend that you do the same.
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Thank you for your attention.
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21:37
(Applause)
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3764

Original video on YouTube.com
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